J Dent Anesth Pain Med.  2017 Mar;17(1):29-35. 10.17245/jdapm.2017.17.1.29.

4% lidocaine versus 4% articaine for inferior alveolar nerve block in impacted lower third molar surgery

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery, Faculty of Dentistry, Mahidol University, Bangkok, Thailand. natthamet.won@mahidol.ac.th
  • 2Faculty of Odonto-Stomatology, University of Health Sciences of Cambodia (UHS), Cambodia.

Abstract

BACKGROUND
No study has compared lidocaine with articaine, each at a concentration of 4% and combined with epinephrine. The purpose of this study was to compare the effectiveness of 4% lidocaine with that of 4% articaine, with a concentration of 1:100,000 epinephrine added to each, in an inferior alveolar nerve block for surgery on impacted lower third molars. METHOD: This study was conducted at the Faculty of Dentistry, Mahidol University in Bangkok, Thailand. The randomized, single-blind, comparative split-mouth study was carried out in patients with symmetrically impacted lower third molars, as identified on panoramic radiographs. Each patient underwent surgery for the removal of the lower third molars by the same surgeon under local anesthesia at two separate visits, 3 weeks apart. The onset and duration of local anesthesia, intra-operative pain, surgical duration, and number of additional anesthetics administered were recorded.
RESULTS
The subjective and objective onset of action for the local anesthetics showed statistically significant differences (P < 0.05). However, the intra-operative pain, surgical duration, duration of local anesthesia, and number of additional anesthetics administered did not show statistically significant differences.
CONCLUSION
The use of 4% articaine for the inferior alveolar nerve block was clinically more effective in the onset of subjective and objective anesthesia as compared with the use of 4% lidocaine. Based on the pain scores from the visual analogue scale, 4% lidocaine provided more analgesia during the procedure, and patients noted less intra-operative pain than with 4% articaine; however, the difference was not clinically significant.

Keyword

Alveolar Nerve, Inferior; Articaine; Lidocaine; Nerve Block; Third Molar; Visual Analog Scale

MeSH Terms

Analgesia
Anesthesia
Anesthesia, Local
Anesthetics
Anesthetics, Local
Carticaine*
Dentistry
Epinephrine
Humans
Lidocaine*
Mandibular Nerve*
Methods
Molar, Third*
Nerve Block
Thailand
Visual Analog Scale
Anesthetics
Anesthetics, Local
Carticaine
Epinephrine
Lidocaine

Figure

  • Fig. 1 Types of lower third molars of the patients studied in this study are shown.


Cited by  4 articles

Double versus single cartridge of 4% articaine infiltration into the retro-molar area for lower third molar surgery
Kamonpun Sawang, Teeranut Chaiyasamut, Sirichai Kiattavornchareon, Verasak Pairuchvej, Bishwa Prakash Bhattarai, Natthamet Wongsirichat
J Dent Anesth Pain Med. 2017;17(2):121-127.    doi: 10.17245/jdapm.2017.17.2.121.

Comparative evaluation of the efficacy, safety, and hemostatic effect of 2% lidocaine with various concentrations of epinephrine
Myong-Hwan Karm, Minyoung Kim, Fiona D. Park, Kwang-Suk Seo, Hyun Jeong Kim
J Dent Anesth Pain Med. 2018;18(3):143-149.    doi: 10.17245/jdapm.2018.18.3.143.

Local anesthesia for mandibular third molar extraction
Chang Kim, Kyung-Gyun Hwang, Chang-Joo Park
J Dent Anesth Pain Med. 2018;18(5):287-294.    doi: 10.17245/jdapm.2018.18.5.287.

Efficacy of dental local anesthetics: A review
Nelly Badr, Johan Aps
J Dent Anesth Pain Med. 2018;18(6):319-332.    doi: 10.17245/jdapm.2018.18.6.319.


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